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ILLINOIS WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY
The eyes of Argus
are upon me, and no
slip will pass unnoticed.
-George Washington
Volume 77 Friday, April 9, 1971, Bloomington, Illinois 61701 Nun
daACprUr ChGS CO71fSOSo
Curriculum changes in sev-eral
departments were approved
at the general faculty meeting
Monday. Changes are as fol-
S lowI i : h h
In the foreign languages, the
following s e c o n d semester
courses will be numbered as
follows: French Intermediate
202: (Cultural Reading) (3)
French Intermediate 202: (Con-versation)
(3).
OTHERS ARE German Inter-mediate
212: (Cultural Reading)
(3), German Intermediate 212:
Dr. J. Archie Hargraves said that even though blacks have (Conversation) (3), Spanish In-been
"part of the mainstream of western civilization, they termediate 222: (Cultural Read-have
been ignored." For story on lectureship, see page 2. ing) (3).
Spanish Intermediate 222:
Events of the annual Greek
Week, April 11-17, get a head-start
vWith voting for 'the out-standing
Greek man and wom-an.
Members of sororities and
fraternities may vote today
(Friday) from 8-12 a.m. in
Memorial Center.
Candidates from the sororit-ies
are Maggie Carter, AGD;
Students compete
for special posts
Elections for the posts )of
Phoenix manager and Fine Arts
Festival, Dad's Day and Home-coming
chairmen and the two elected student members of all-
University Judiciary Committee
will be held at the April 18
Student Senate meeting.
Those wishing to have plat-forms
published in the Argus
should submit them to the Ar-gus
office by 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Platforms should be no longer
than 250 words, typed triple-spaced
on a 65-space line and
indented ten spaces for para-graphs.
Kathy Schrag, AOPi; Linda
Knopf, KD; Pam Martin, KKG;
Linda Kershaw, SAI; and Pam
Haeffele, SK.
Representing the fraternities
are Steve Taylor, Acacia; Steve
Ketcham, PGD; Jeff Neuhauser,
PMA; Kent Taulbee, SX; Art
Koegel, TKE; Larry Anderson,
ThetaX; and Larry Ballard, ZE.
Greek Week activities begin
Sunday at 8 p.m. with "The
Chase," starring Marlon Bran-do,
Jane Fonda, and Robert
Redford. Cost of the IFC-Pan-
Hellenic sponsored film will be
50 cents per person and 75
cents for couples.
A banquet will be held 5:30
p.m. Monday in the Main
Lounge. Guest speaker will be,
Dr. Roger Miller, president of
Millikin University. An alumni
of Wesleyan and PMA, Miller
will be speaking on the Greek
system and Wesleyan.
All of the houses will be par-ticipating
in inner-fraternity-sorority
dinner exchanges at
5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Fri-day.
Auditions for the variety
show will be held 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday in Room 24, Presser
Hall.
Workshops will be 3-5 p.m.
Thursday and Friday. Discus-sioins
will center on Greek
house activities and problems.
IWU Stage Band will present
a coicert 7 p.m. Friday. The
top three acts from variety
show try-outs will also be pre-sented
then.
wilNl1o wone lcosmateu rd10a0y :chthiled renG rfereokms
the homes for underprivileged
children for a picnic on the
quad. "Stud Mouse" will play 9
p.m. Saturday. The Greekespon-sored
dance is free.
The entire campus is invited
to attend the movie, concert,
.and dance.
Deadline approaches
for off-campus living
Any students planning to live
off campus next year must con-tact
the dean of students' office
by April 16, according to Dean
of Students Jerry Jensen.
To be eligible a student must
be 21 years old on or before
Sept. 10, 1971.
(Conversation) (3), and Greek
Intermediate 232 (3) complete
the list.
PSYCHOLOGY 101-General
Psychology Laboratory (1) will
be optional for fine arts and
nursing majors but required for
liberal arts students. This is in
addition to the three-hour
course.
Other psychology courses are
added: 215-Abnormal Psychol
ogy (3) and dropped: 200-Lab.
oratory Experience in Psychol-ogy
(2).
THE SCHOOL OF ART has
dropped Fundamentals of Art
101 (2) and Art Concepts 102
(2) and added Fundamentals of
Art 101 (3) .
Education 401-Techniques of
Elementary Schol Teaching (4)
has been changed to 401-
Teaching Elementary Social
Studies and Language Arts (4).
EDUCATION 310 - Human
Growth and Development (3)
has been changed to 310-Edu-cational
Psychology (3).
Two additional education
courses have been added: 330-
Teaching Elementary School Sci-nber
25
School Practicum (3).
The Speech Department has
completed a major curriculum
revision. Seventeen courses have
been dropped: 110 --- Speech
Communication (3), 104-Im-provement
of the Speaking
Voice, 107-Diction and Phone-tics
(3), 203-Parliamentary
Procedure (1) and 240-Radio
and TV in Society (3).
OTHERS ARE 251, 252, 351,
352-Intercollegiate Forensics
(1), 302-Psychology of Com-munication
(3), 314---Advanced
Interpretation of Shakespeare
(3) and 321-Broadcasting Media
I (3).
Additional drops are 322--
Broadcasting Media II (3), 342
-Conference in Speech, 402--.<
Idnutcrtoidoun ct(i3o)n, 4o0f3 -SBpreieticshh RPeupbrloic.
Address (3) and 404-American
Public Address (3).
Six courses were added: 110
-Principles of Communication
(3), 120-Voice and Diction (3),
302-Mass Communication (3),
350-Intercollegiate Forensics
(1), 390-Independent Study (1-
4) and 405-History of Public
Address (3).
CoMmission studies autonomy
Living Unit Study Commis-sion,
which will also discuss the
pros and eons of autonomy,
will hold its first meeting Mon-day,
Dean of Students Jerry
Jensen has announced.
The all-university commission
was appointed by President
SRtoubdeernt t ESceknleayte otno rsetquudeys t thoef
feasibility of establishing auto-nomous
residence halls.
Members are Steve Pittman,
Nancy Frederick, Don Lehnhoff,
Robert Montgomery, alumni
director; Dr. Roger Schnaitter,
assistant professor of psychol-ogy;
and Jensen, chairman.
One major point the 'commis-sion
will discuss is visitation.
Student Personnel Council,
which has had the responsibil-ity
of studying and changing
the program, has formulated a
statement regarding visitation
for the commission.
The statement and a plan
for an expanded visitation pro-gram
were sent to the Presi-dent's
Cabinet in March.
But "the cabinet did not take
action," Dean of Students Jer-ry
Jensen stated. It wanted the
'commission to look at the
whole picture "rather than take
a small step now," he added.
The statement explains the
development of the program,
including the results of the eva-luation
in January, 1971.
Advance registration nears
Advance registration for first semes-ter
1971-72 will be held in Patio A
April 19-30 from 1-4 p.m.
Students will be scheduled to register
according to the number of credit hours
earned.
THE SCHEDULE follows:
April 19-85-above hrs. April 20--76-84 hrs.
April 21-57-75 April 22-51-56
April 23-47-50 April 26-29-46
April 27-17 -28 April 28-17 (Br-Z)
April 29--15 -17 April 30---0-15
(A-Bow)
AFTER CLASS schedules are publish-ed
and prior to scheduled registration
time, students should see their advisor.
Students pick up their registration
packets in Patio A on their scheduled
days. After signing class rosters and
completing the cards, they report to the
dean of students office to complete room
and board cards.
All cards mUist be returned to the
registrar's office.
REGISTRATION check will be held
Sept. 9, 1971, in the Main Lounge ac-cording
to the following schedule:
8- 8:55 a.m. Mork-Reed
9- 9:55 a.m. Reef--Stov
10-10:55 a.m. Stow-Z
1- 1:55 p.m. Brv-Ew
11-11:55 a.m. A-Bru
2- 2:55 p.m. F-Hep
3- 3:55 p.m. Her-Lan
4- 4:55 p.m. Lao-Moni
THOSE STUDENTS not completing
registration check on this day may have
their classes cancelled if other students
need them.
A $50 advance tuition payment is due
before May 1. Unklss the student in-forms
the university before July 15 that
he is not returning, his deposit will be
forfeited.
Artist ~ayle /Mcaughey stands before one of the portraits in her sen-ior
honor art show, displayed in Black Culture Center. Her "stark subtlety"
stresses geometry, form and a hard-edged approach. See story page 2.

The Argus, Illinois Wesleyan University; printed by The Pantagraph, Bloomington, IL from 1894-2009 and P&P Press, Peoria, IL from 2009-present.

Rights

The Argus retains the rights to this material. Permission to reproduce this content for other than educational purposes must be explicitly granted. Contact argus@iwu.edu or 309-556-3117 for more information.

Argus issues published from 1894-Spring 2003 were scanned at 600 dpi on a NM1000-SS scanner by Northern Micrographics, La Crosse, Wisconsin. Fulltext OCR was accomplished by the same company in Summer 2009. Issues published from the fall of 2003-present are born-digital.

ILLINOIS WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY
The eyes of Argus
are upon me, and no
slip will pass unnoticed.
-George Washington
Volume 77 Friday, April 9, 1971, Bloomington, Illinois 61701 Nun
daACprUr ChGS CO71fSOSo
Curriculum changes in sev-eral
departments were approved
at the general faculty meeting
Monday. Changes are as fol-
S lowI i : h h
In the foreign languages, the
following s e c o n d semester
courses will be numbered as
follows: French Intermediate
202: (Cultural Reading) (3)
French Intermediate 202: (Con-versation)
(3).
OTHERS ARE German Inter-mediate
212: (Cultural Reading)
(3), German Intermediate 212:
Dr. J. Archie Hargraves said that even though blacks have (Conversation) (3), Spanish In-been
"part of the mainstream of western civilization, they termediate 222: (Cultural Read-have
been ignored." For story on lectureship, see page 2. ing) (3).
Spanish Intermediate 222:
Events of the annual Greek
Week, April 11-17, get a head-start
vWith voting for 'the out-standing
Greek man and wom-an.
Members of sororities and
fraternities may vote today
(Friday) from 8-12 a.m. in
Memorial Center.
Candidates from the sororit-ies
are Maggie Carter, AGD;
Students compete
for special posts
Elections for the posts )of
Phoenix manager and Fine Arts
Festival, Dad's Day and Home-coming
chairmen and the two elected student members of all-
University Judiciary Committee
will be held at the April 18
Student Senate meeting.
Those wishing to have plat-forms
published in the Argus
should submit them to the Ar-gus
office by 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Platforms should be no longer
than 250 words, typed triple-spaced
on a 65-space line and
indented ten spaces for para-graphs.
Kathy Schrag, AOPi; Linda
Knopf, KD; Pam Martin, KKG;
Linda Kershaw, SAI; and Pam
Haeffele, SK.
Representing the fraternities
are Steve Taylor, Acacia; Steve
Ketcham, PGD; Jeff Neuhauser,
PMA; Kent Taulbee, SX; Art
Koegel, TKE; Larry Anderson,
ThetaX; and Larry Ballard, ZE.
Greek Week activities begin
Sunday at 8 p.m. with "The
Chase," starring Marlon Bran-do,
Jane Fonda, and Robert
Redford. Cost of the IFC-Pan-
Hellenic sponsored film will be
50 cents per person and 75
cents for couples.
A banquet will be held 5:30
p.m. Monday in the Main
Lounge. Guest speaker will be,
Dr. Roger Miller, president of
Millikin University. An alumni
of Wesleyan and PMA, Miller
will be speaking on the Greek
system and Wesleyan.
All of the houses will be par-ticipating
in inner-fraternity-sorority
dinner exchanges at
5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Fri-day.
Auditions for the variety
show will be held 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday in Room 24, Presser
Hall.
Workshops will be 3-5 p.m.
Thursday and Friday. Discus-sioins
will center on Greek
house activities and problems.
IWU Stage Band will present
a coicert 7 p.m. Friday. The
top three acts from variety
show try-outs will also be pre-sented
then.
wilNl1o wone lcosmateu rd10a0y :chthiled renG rfereokms
the homes for underprivileged
children for a picnic on the
quad. "Stud Mouse" will play 9
p.m. Saturday. The Greekespon-sored
dance is free.
The entire campus is invited
to attend the movie, concert,
.and dance.
Deadline approaches
for off-campus living
Any students planning to live
off campus next year must con-tact
the dean of students' office
by April 16, according to Dean
of Students Jerry Jensen.
To be eligible a student must
be 21 years old on or before
Sept. 10, 1971.
(Conversation) (3), and Greek
Intermediate 232 (3) complete
the list.
PSYCHOLOGY 101-General
Psychology Laboratory (1) will
be optional for fine arts and
nursing majors but required for
liberal arts students. This is in
addition to the three-hour
course.
Other psychology courses are
added: 215-Abnormal Psychol
ogy (3) and dropped: 200-Lab.
oratory Experience in Psychol-ogy
(2).
THE SCHOOL OF ART has
dropped Fundamentals of Art
101 (2) and Art Concepts 102
(2) and added Fundamentals of
Art 101 (3) .
Education 401-Techniques of
Elementary Schol Teaching (4)
has been changed to 401-
Teaching Elementary Social
Studies and Language Arts (4).
EDUCATION 310 - Human
Growth and Development (3)
has been changed to 310-Edu-cational
Psychology (3).
Two additional education
courses have been added: 330-
Teaching Elementary School Sci-nber
25
School Practicum (3).
The Speech Department has
completed a major curriculum
revision. Seventeen courses have
been dropped: 110 --- Speech
Communication (3), 104-Im-provement
of the Speaking
Voice, 107-Diction and Phone-tics
(3), 203-Parliamentary
Procedure (1) and 240-Radio
and TV in Society (3).
OTHERS ARE 251, 252, 351,
352-Intercollegiate Forensics
(1), 302-Psychology of Com-munication
(3), 314---Advanced
Interpretation of Shakespeare
(3) and 321-Broadcasting Media
I (3).
Additional drops are 322--
Broadcasting Media II (3), 342
-Conference in Speech, 402--.<
Idnutcrtoidoun ct(i3o)n, 4o0f3 -SBpreieticshh RPeupbrloic.
Address (3) and 404-American
Public Address (3).
Six courses were added: 110
-Principles of Communication
(3), 120-Voice and Diction (3),
302-Mass Communication (3),
350-Intercollegiate Forensics
(1), 390-Independent Study (1-
4) and 405-History of Public
Address (3).
CoMmission studies autonomy
Living Unit Study Commis-sion,
which will also discuss the
pros and eons of autonomy,
will hold its first meeting Mon-day,
Dean of Students Jerry
Jensen has announced.
The all-university commission
was appointed by President
SRtoubdeernt t ESceknleayte otno rsetquudeys t thoef
feasibility of establishing auto-nomous
residence halls.
Members are Steve Pittman,
Nancy Frederick, Don Lehnhoff,
Robert Montgomery, alumni
director; Dr. Roger Schnaitter,
assistant professor of psychol-ogy;
and Jensen, chairman.
One major point the 'commis-sion
will discuss is visitation.
Student Personnel Council,
which has had the responsibil-ity
of studying and changing
the program, has formulated a
statement regarding visitation
for the commission.
The statement and a plan
for an expanded visitation pro-gram
were sent to the Presi-dent's
Cabinet in March.
But "the cabinet did not take
action," Dean of Students Jer-ry
Jensen stated. It wanted the
'commission to look at the
whole picture "rather than take
a small step now," he added.
The statement explains the
development of the program,
including the results of the eva-luation
in January, 1971.
Advance registration nears
Advance registration for first semes-ter
1971-72 will be held in Patio A
April 19-30 from 1-4 p.m.
Students will be scheduled to register
according to the number of credit hours
earned.
THE SCHEDULE follows:
April 19-85-above hrs. April 20--76-84 hrs.
April 21-57-75 April 22-51-56
April 23-47-50 April 26-29-46
April 27-17 -28 April 28-17 (Br-Z)
April 29--15 -17 April 30---0-15
(A-Bow)
AFTER CLASS schedules are publish-ed
and prior to scheduled registration
time, students should see their advisor.
Students pick up their registration
packets in Patio A on their scheduled
days. After signing class rosters and
completing the cards, they report to the
dean of students office to complete room
and board cards.
All cards mUist be returned to the
registrar's office.
REGISTRATION check will be held
Sept. 9, 1971, in the Main Lounge ac-cording
to the following schedule:
8- 8:55 a.m. Mork-Reed
9- 9:55 a.m. Reef--Stov
10-10:55 a.m. Stow-Z
1- 1:55 p.m. Brv-Ew
11-11:55 a.m. A-Bru
2- 2:55 p.m. F-Hep
3- 3:55 p.m. Her-Lan
4- 4:55 p.m. Lao-Moni
THOSE STUDENTS not completing
registration check on this day may have
their classes cancelled if other students
need them.
A $50 advance tuition payment is due
before May 1. Unklss the student in-forms
the university before July 15 that
he is not returning, his deposit will be
forfeited.
Artist ~ayle /Mcaughey stands before one of the portraits in her sen-ior
honor art show, displayed in Black Culture Center. Her "stark subtlety"
stresses geometry, form and a hard-edged approach. See story page 2.